I din't htink I would be back so soon after two posts about things that were resolved and neither turned out to be WRA problem. This one I feel like I owe it to report. I don't know how I could have been so stupid, but I got an email telling me someone had changed the settings on my Amercan Express account and to click the link if this wasn't true. I scratched my head and clicked the link, but here is why I have to report it, it was Avast that popped up telling me I was hit with a Trojan Horse
Here is the link to the Avast web page that I got by way of going to the links within my Avast program:
&p_prc=C:]http://www.avast.com/en-us/lp-pr-virus-alert?p_ext=&utm_campaign=Virus_alert&utm_source=prg_ise_70_0&utm_medium=prg_systray&utm_content=.%2Fpaid%2Fen-us%2Fvirus-alert-default&p_vir=JS:Redirector-RO%20[Trj]&p_prc=C:Program%20FilesMozilla%20Firefoxfirefox.exe&p_obj=http://www.mrelgin.com/3STa3Me/index.html&p_var=.%2Fpaid%2Fen-us%2Fvirus-alert-default&p_pro=2&p_vep=7&p_ves=0&p_lqa=0&p_lsu=24&p_lst=0&p_lex=450&p_lng=en&p_lid=en-us&p_elm=7&p_vbd=1466
The one that hit me is:
JS:Redirector-RO [Trj]
I took Avast off two of my macines and was ready to take it off this computer in the basement and then it hit. I did a WRA scan after that and it came up clean. Would WRA have found it if Avast didn't? Now I am wondering it I shuold continue to run both programs on all machines.
Solved
Trojam today
Best answer by JimM
The reason Avast will have got to it first is that if you have another antivirus program on your computer, WSA is smart enough to know that the other antivirus program is a good program just trying to do its job for you. So rather than trying to argue with that program and trump it, it will just let it work for you. Webroot was still there for you if it was needed.
Also, that's a javascript redirector - not a file that was dropped. WSA allowed Avast to cut the attempted infection off at a point prior to when it would have tried to drop a malicious file onto the computer. So when you did the scan with WSA after the fact, there was no infection there to find because it never landed on the computer to begin with.
View originalAlso, that's a javascript redirector - not a file that was dropped. WSA allowed Avast to cut the attempted infection off at a point prior to when it would have tried to drop a malicious file onto the computer. So when you did the scan with WSA after the fact, there was no infection there to find because it never landed on the computer to begin with.
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